Edmonton Journal

Price hikes looming for customers

Walmart, Macy’s say higher tariffs from Chinese imports could raise retail costs

- Anne D’Innocenzio

Walmart warned on Thursday that higher tariffs on imports from China will mean higher prices.

The comments came after the largest retailer in the United States reported its best sale performanc­e at its establishe­d U.S. namesake stores for the fiscal first quarter in nine years. It marked 19 straight quarters of same-store sales gains.

“We’re monitoring the tariff discussion­s and are hopeful that an agreement can be reached,” said chief financial officer Brett Biggs.

But he told reporters, “Increased tariffs will lead to increased prices for our customers.”

Walmart declined to comment on what type of price hikes shoppers could expect and which products would get the biggest increases. But the spectre of higher prices was also echoed by Macy’s CEO Jeff Gennette.

He told investors Wednesday that if a fourth round of tariffs takes effect, that could mean higher retail prices for both store label and national brands.

Target, J.C. Penney and other major retailers will be reporting results in the next few days and should shed more light on the issue.

Walmart, Macy’s and other major retailers have been left largely unscathed by the first several rounds of tariffs since they focused more on industrial and agricultur­al products. But that changed last week when the Trump administra­tion slapped 25-per-cent tariffs on imports such as furniture.

The administra­tion wants to extend the 25-per-cent tariffs to practicall­y all Chinese imports not already hit with levies including toys, shirts, household goods and sneakers. That’s roughly US$300-billion worth of products on top of the US$250 billion targeted earlier.

Walmart and others have benefited from a continued strong economy and low unemployme­nt, but shoppers continue to look for deals. In particular, Walmart’s core customers who live paycheque to paycheque would be particular­ly sensitive to any price increases.

Still, Walmart has clout with its suppliers and is working with its manufactur­ing partners to mitigate the impact.

Such looming extra costs come as Walmart is investing more in its business to compete with online leader Amazon in a fight to see who can get packages to customers faster.

Walmart launched free next-day delivery on its most popular items this week in Phoenix and Las Vegas. It plans to roll out next-day delivery to most of the country by year-end, covering 220,000 popular items from diapers to toys, with a minimum order of US$35.

Walmart has said the costs for next-day delivery are lower versus two-day service because eligible items will come from a single fulfilment centre located closest to the customer. This means orders will ship in one box, or in as few as possible, unlike two-day deliveries that come in multiple boxes from multiple locations.

The announceme­nt was made two weeks after Amazon said it would upgrade its free shipping for members from the standard two-day delivery, to one day.

Walmart, based in Bentonvill­e, Ark., said that U.S. sales at stores opened at least a year rose 3.4 per cent during the fiscal first quarter, fuelled by its grocery business.

U.S. e-commerce business rose 37 per cent, helped by strong sales in fashion and home goods. Walmart’s online growth was also fuelled by its continued expansion of online grocery services, including curbside pickup and home delivery.

Walmart has about 2,450 stores that offer free grocery pickup for customers who shop online. It also has nearly 1,000 stores that offer same-day grocery delivery. The company said it was on track to offer same-day grocery delivery from 1,600 stores, while also offering grocery pickup from 3,100 stores by year-end.

Walmart’s Sam’s Clubs posted a 0.3-per-cent increase in same-store sales, excluding fuel. Walmart is also testing innovative new ways to cut costs and make workers more efficient. It officially opened a lab in a Neighborho­od Store, a smaller grocer concept, in Levittown, N.Y., that has thousands of cameras that mind the store and help keep track of items that need to be replenishe­d.

It’s hoping to scale some of the technology to other stores.

The company reported first quarter net income of US$3.84 billion, or US$1.33. Earnings, adjusted for non-recurring gains, came to US$1.13 per share. That beat per-share earnings projection­s by 11 cents, according to a survey of industry analysts by Zacks Investment Research.

Revenue was US$123.93 billion, missing forecasts for US$125.33 billion. Excluding currency impacts, Walmart’s revenue rose 2.5 per cent to US$125.8 billion.

Walmart Inc. stuck to its outlook for the year. Shares rose US$1.43, or 1.43 per cent, to close at US$101.31 in New York.

We’re monitoring the tariff discussion­s and are hopeful that an agreement can be reached.

 ?? Mark Lennihan/the associated press ?? Retail titan Walmart says it’s counting on a resolution to the trade dispute between Beijing and Washington and warned that higher tariffs on imports from China will mean higher prices. The company saw 19 straight quarters of same-store sales gains.
Mark Lennihan/the associated press Retail titan Walmart says it’s counting on a resolution to the trade dispute between Beijing and Washington and warned that higher tariffs on imports from China will mean higher prices. The company saw 19 straight quarters of same-store sales gains.

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